“Oh, so it’s fairly recent then?”
“About two months.”
“Sorry.”
I started to say, It’s okay, but it didn’t feel okay. “Yeah.”
“My parents have been divorced for seven years.”
I sat on the edge of her bed. “Does it get any easier?”
She gave me a look of empathy that seemed very sincere. “It totally does. I promise.” She nodded her head toward her computer. “Do you ever chat online? We should exchange info.”
“Sounds good.”
Her computer dinged, and she glanced at it, then let out a sigh. “This is what I’m talking about.”
“What?”
“Party at Trevor’s the day after Thanksgiving. Sharing the same friends with your ex sucks.” She typed a response in the chat window. “Do you want to come with me?”
At first I thought she was narrating her own typing, because she wasn’t looking at me, but then she glanced up with a questioning eyebrow raise.
“Me?”
“Yeah. It would be nice to have a new face around. A friend who’s mine and not one I share with Trevor. Maybe you can help me buffer some of the awkwardness.”
I laughed. “I’m not a very good awkwardness buffer. I kind of create awkwardness.”
“Even better.”
I shrugged and my general loathing of parties almost made me say no thanks, but then I remembered my multicolored toenails and the extreme boredom awaiting me at my dad’s house. And how when I had nothing to occupy my mind, it did a great job occupying itself with Duke. “Why not?”
CHAPTER 6
Laila: Know anything useful about motorcycles?
I walked up the drive to the open garage. Connor stood staring at a holographic image of a motorcycle. He slid the holograph simulator across the counter so the glowing image moved to fit perfectly over his real bike—the ghostlike replica giving the metal a hazy appearance. Then he picked up an engine part off the counter beside the simulator and turned it, trying to replicate the placement of the part.
“What happened to your bike?”
He looked up, surprise making a momentary appearance on his face before he went back to his task. “It had an unfavorable meeting with the pavement.”
“Poor bike.” I watched him for a little longer. A lock of hair fell across his forehead, and he pushed it out of his eyes. It was obvious he had been doing that all day by the grease streaks that lined his face. He had amazing hair—the perfect amount of body and shine.
I shifted on my feet, moving my hand to my hip. This would work a lot better if he looked at me, but his bike had all his attention. I finally got impatient. “I need something.”
“What?”
Since the guy at the party had been reluctant to give his name, I figured Connor wouldn’t openly admit he had ability advancement programs. I had to be careful in how I approached this: start with what I knew he had, then work my way up to the other things I needed. “I’m not sure. You offered me a block enhancer a few weeks ago at a party. I want it.” It wasn’t like I didn’t want the block enhancer. After my dad had taken the grocery money, I needed something to keep him out of my head. My own mental blocks weren’t strong enough yet.
“Give me one minute.” He popped off a dented section on the front of his bike and sighed. “These aren’t easy to get here.”
“Maybe you should stop playing with Norm toys, then.”
“This is not a Norm toy. It’s a hybrid. If it were Norm-made, it would be gas-powered. It just has the body of a Norm bike. I think they look so much better.”
I gave his holograph-cloaked bike a once-over. “Paint-covered metal, so beautiful.”
He ran his hand along the seat, the tips of his fingers glowing blue as the light hit them. “Can’t think of anything more beautiful.” He met my eyes then, with his muddy green ones, like he expected me to challenge that statement. I didn’t care what he thought was beautiful.
“If you get me the blocker, I’ll give you and your bike some privacy.”
“Funny.”
I took a lap around his garage. It was like a collision of old meets new. The sleek shelves and high-tech tools next to the old, greasy parts. A case of oil sat on the shelf. So his motorcycle wasn’t Norm, but he had something that was. Out the window, in his side yard, I saw the offender—a beat-up truck. He really did like Norm toys. I didn’t understand people who collected old things. Didn’t they appreciate how far we’d come? Whatever. It was none of my business. I just wanted his help.
I sat on a stool nearby. Now he was going slow on purpose. To make a point. I could tell by the way he studied the part in his hand, then looked at the image over and over. If he would just look at me more, I knew I could get him to do what I wanted. A small smile, a flip of my hair. Men weren’t hard to manipulate. I was so tempted to Erase the last five minutes and step into the garage again for a do-over. This time he wouldn’t be in control. I would.
“Do you ever sit still?”
“What?”
He pointed to my knee, which was bouncing all over the place.
“Most people don’t make me wait.” And by people I meant guys.
Connor wiped his hands on a towel and said, “I’ll be right back. Stay.”
I rolled my eyes.
He came back with a case and opened it, revealing several neat rows of electronic clips.
“Which one did you want? I forget.”
“A block for Telepaths.” I stood and peered over his shoulder into the case. “Does it work?”